In Canada, the first intervention by the rules of modern asepsis was conducted at H�pital Notre-Dame in 1899 . H�pital Notre-Dame has been associated with Universit?de Montreal since its establishment in 1920.
22.
Medical or clean asepsis reduces the number of organisms and prevents their spread; surgical or sterile asepsis includes procedures to eliminate micro-organisms from an area and is practiced by surgical technologists and nurses in operating theaters and treatment areas.
23.
Medical or clean asepsis reduces the number of organisms and prevents their spread; surgical or sterile asepsis includes procedures to eliminate micro-organisms from an area and is practiced by surgical technologists and nurses in operating theaters and treatment areas.
24.
However, it was only with the discovery of anesthesia and surgical asepsis that new surgical instruments were invented to allow the penetration of the inner sanctum, or the previously forbidden body cavities, namely the skull, the thorax and the abdomen.
25.
To learn more, check out on the Web a Q & A on the safety of dental waterlines, provided by the Organization for Safety and Asepsis Procedures ( www . osap . org / water / wl-qna . htm ).
26.
Introducing asepsis and antisepsis, sterilization of equipment in an autoclave and the use of sterile water for hand washing in his surgical service, Under his leadership were formed personalities of the Romanian surgery as Ernest Juvara, Ion Tnsescu, Paul Anghel and Nicolae Hortolomei.
27.
He was a thoroughly sound, although slightly conservative surgeon, and was a master of asepsis, with the result that aseptic measures were, and still are, carried out at Broken Hill in a manner at least equal to that of any other hospital in Australia.
28.
This is just prior to the adoption of a hygienic surgical environment ( see asepsis ) . " The Gross Clinic " is thus often contrasted with Eakins's later painting " The Agnew Clinic " ( 1889 ), which depicts a cleaner, brighter, surgical theater, with the participants in " white coats ".
29.
Its permanent exposition comprises approx . 6, 000 medical objects of the 19th and 20th centuries arranged, thematically in 24 rooms devoted to different medical specialities : folk medicine, unconventional medicine, pharmacy, weights and measures, asepsis and antisepsis, microscopes, laboratory material, X-rays, obstetrics and gynaecology, surgery, anesthesia, endoscope, odontology, cardiology, ophthalmology, electrotherapy, pathological anatomy and natural sciences.
30.
"' Asepsis "'is the state of being free from disease-causing micro-organisms ( such as pathogenic bacteria, viruses, pathogenic fungi, and sterile, " meaning it is free of all biological contaminants, not just those that can cause disease, putrefaction, or fermentation, but that is a situation that is difficult to attain, especially given the patient is often a source of infectious agents.